Making Ireland Roman
Irish Neo-Latin Writers and the Republic of Letters
Cloth: 978 1 85918 453 0
Price: $66.00  

Publisher: Cork University Press
December 2009 , 256 pp., 6 1/4" x 9 3/4"
This collection of articles by leading scholars focuses on Irish writing in Latin in the Renaissance and aims to rewrite Irish cultural history through recovery and analysis of Latin sources. This book renders accessible for the first time the vastly important Irish contribution to the counter-reformation, to European Renaissance and baroque literature in Latin and to the intellectual culture of European Latinity. The ethnic, cultural and religious divisions within Ireland produced a divided Latin writing and reading community.

The Latin language became the medium in which the Catholic Church operated. When Christianity took root in Ireland so too did Latin. It became one of the principal languages of Ireland for over a thousand years resulting in over one thousand books being published by Irish authors. In order to convey the idiosyncrasies of Gaelic culture in the language of European scholarship to an international audience, Irish authors had to engage in a process of cultural translation. Many were Catholic exiles who attempted to promote an alternative to the English colonial narrative being written by domestic scholars. Some writers felt compelled to defend their country’s reputation as a result of defamatory comments made by other writers.

Articles include a detailed reconstruction of a feud with Scottish historians about the identity of medieval “Scotia” as they claimed that it referred to Scotland rather than Ireland. Other articles include a contextual study of the political epic poem “Ormonius”, an examination of the major Latinist Richard Stanihurst and an evaluation of the literature of Catholic exile.

Table of Contents:
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Ireland and Romanitas—Jason Harris and Keith Sidwell
1) Some Reflexes of Latin Learning and of the Renaissance in Ireland c. 1450-c. 1600—Diarmaid Ó Cathain
2) Derricke and Stanihurst: A Dialogue—John Barry
3) The Richard Stanihurst-Justus Lipsius Friendship: Scholarship and Religion Under Spanish Hapsburg Patronage in the Late Sixteenth Century—Colm Lennon
4) ‘The Tipperary Hero’: Dermot O’Meara’s Ormonius (1615)—Keith Sidwell and David Edwards
5) ‘Making Ireland Spanish’: The Political Writings of Philip O’Sullican Beare—Hiram Morgan
6) The Scotic Debate: Philip O’Sullivan Beare and His Tenebriomastix--David Caulfield
7) A Case Study in Rhetorical Composition: Stephen White’s Two Apologiae for Ireland—Jason Harris
8) Latin Invective Verse in the Commentarius Rinuccinianus--Gráinne McLaughlin
9) Ussher and the Collection of Manuscripts in Early Modern Europe—Elizabethanne Boran
Notes and References
Index


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